SANAA/ADEN (Reuters) - A suicide bombing claimed by al Qaeda killed at least 26 people outside a presidential palace in southern Yemen on Saturday, hours after the newly-elected president was sworn in and said the battle against the Islamists was a "national duty."Related StoriesVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTaliban militants […]
KABUL (Reuters) - Two American officers were shot dead at close range in Afghanistan's Interior Ministry on Saturday, a U.S. official said, as rage gripped the country for a fifth day over the burning of the Muslim holy book at a NATO base.Related StoriesVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTaliban militants say they shot down U.S. droneI […]
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistani security forces on Saturday began demolishing the house where al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. special forces in Abbottabad last May, a senior police official in the town said.Related StoriesVedanta eyes streamlined structure with merger planVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTaliban […]
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Germany may not be ready to back an increase in the euro zone's bailout fund at a summit next week, delaying progress towards building up nearly $2 trillion (1.25 trillion pounds) in firepower to tackle fallout from Europe's sovereign debt crisis.Related StoriesVedanta eyes streamlined structure with merger planVenezuela […]
BEIRUT (Reuters) - The Syrian military took its bombardment of the rebel-held Baba Amro district of Homs into a fourth week on Saturday as the Red Cross tried to evacuate more distressed civilians from the city.Related StoriesVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTaliban militants say they shot down U.S. droneIran uranium "discrepancy […]
VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran has yet to give an explanation over a small quantity of uranium metal missing from a research site, the U.N. nuclear watchdog said in a report that voiced concern over possible military links to Tehran's nuclear programme.Related StoriesVedanta eyes streamlined structure with merger planVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure […]
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - A U.S. drone crashed Saturday in North Waziristan, not far from the Afghan border, Pakistan intelligence officials said, while Taliban militants said they had shot it down.Related StoriesVedanta eyes streamlined structure with merger planVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsIran uranium "discrepancy" st […]
(Reuters) - Warren Buffett told investors on Saturday the Berkshire Hathaway board has identified his successor, easing some shareholder concern about the future of the company once the famed 81-year-old investor steps down as chief executive.Related StoriesVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTaliban militants say they shot down U.S. droneIra […]
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Former South African president Nelson Mandela was comfortable in hospital on Saturday after undergoing a "diagnostic procedure" for abdominal pains, the government said, telling people not to panic about the health of the 93-year-old anti-apartheid leader.Related StoriesVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTa […]
MILAN (Reuters) - Italian judges on Saturday ended former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's trial on charges of bribing British lawyer David Mills, saying the statute of limitations had run out and a verdict could not be reached.Related StoriesVenezuela's Chavez has shot at a cure - doctorsTaliban militants say they shot down U.S. droneIran uraniu […]
Nato announced it is withdrawing all its staff from Afghan government ministries in the capital following the shooting of senior American army officers.
Norwegian musician and composer Terje Isungset uses his background in jazz and Scandinavian music, to create musical instruments from non-traditional materials including ice.
All eyes are on Los Angeles as the film industry's biggest stars gather for the Academy Awards, but why are film makers turning their backs on the city?
Comic-book legend Stan Lee, the co-creator of Spider-Man and other Marvel characters including the Hulk, The X-Men and Iron Man, speaks to the BBC about some of his characters.
Italian judges throw out a bribery case against Silvio Berlusconi, Italy's former prime minister, because it has expired under the statute of limitations.
An explosion caused by a fire at a Brazilian research station in the Antarctic leaves two soldiers missing and one injured, the Brazilian military says.
As Mitt Romney’s campaign intensifies fund-raising to meet rising costs, some Republicans are worried about the impact of an extended party contest on the November election.
Diplomats are working to resolve criminal charges against Americans on the eve of their trial in a case that has threatened to upend the 30-year alliance between the two countries.
Other New England states may soon follow Massachusetts, which last fall became the first state in the region to pass a broad law allowing resort casinos.
Two American officers were shot dead inside the Interior Ministry building in Kabul amid a deepening crisis in Afghanistan over the burning of Korans at a NATO army base.
Warren Buffett, 81, did not name the candidate, and emphasized that he and his longtime business partner, the 88-year-old Charlie Munger, were not leaving Berkshire Hathaway.
Gov. Rick Perry’s unsuccessful presidential campaign has shed light on Texas politicians’ pension benefits, which are exempt from government transparency laws.
Abed Rabu Mansour Hadi was sworn in as president of Yemen on Saturday morning after he won an early presidential election in which he was the only candidate.
The former prime minister of Italy was accused of bribing a tax lawyer to withhold testimony to protect him, but a court in Milan said the statute of limitations had expired.
The Taliban say they carried out an attack in the Afghan interior ministry that killed two American officers in response to the recent burning of Qurans at a U.S. base.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces pounded resistance strongholds Saturday, opposition activists said, raising questions about what immediate effect a plan by world powers to end the violence will have in the hardest hit areas.
Yemen swears in its new president, cementing a power transfer deal reached in November to end months of violence over outgoing leader Ali Abdullah Saleh's longtime rule.
Economic opportunity must be a priority if the revolutions sweeping the Middle East and North Africa are to succeed, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Saturday.
Former South African president and anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela has hernia surgery and will probably leave hospital in days, a family member says.
Pakistani authorities have begun to demolish the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, that Osama Bin Laden used as a hideout until he was killed in a raid by U.S. forces in May 2011.
The son-in-law of Spain's King Juan Carlos arrived in court to testify before a magistrate Saturday as a suspect in a fraud scandal that has created unprecedented problems for the popular royal family.
Oil prices surged on Friday as the UN's nuclear watchdog said Iran had significantly increased its production of higher-grade uranium over the past six months and had failed to dispel concerns that it was pursuing atomic weapons.
Republican presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum spent Friday trading barbs and stumping for votes in Michigan, where polls show the two candidates in a virtual tie four days before what has emerged as a critical contest.
THE man described as the “Margaret Thatcher” of the National Library of Scotland will step down after a dozen years as chairman, during which he wrenched the institution into the 21st century but made enemies in the process.
A CONSULTANT who failed to give enough anaesthetic to a pregnant woman when she was having an elective Caesarean has been told he can continue working under supervision.
ONE of the last surviving veterans who worked on the notorious Burma Death Railway after being taken prisoner by the Japanese during the Second World War has broken his silence about the ordeal.
CRAIG Whyte, the besieged Rangers chairman, was left increasingly isolated on Friday night after a serving director at the club apologised to supporters for helping pave the way for the businessman’s takeover.
AMBITIOUS plans were announced yesterday to redevelop the final 40 hectares of land on the site of Aberdeenshire’s last paper mill to deliver a major boost to the local economy.
BUS passengers in Scotland's cities will bear the brunt of service cuts and fare hikes due to changes to the way government subsidies are handed out, two of the country's biggest operators have claimed.
A coroner has opened Australia's fourth inquest into one of the most notorious legal dramas in the nation's history: the 1980 death of a nine-week-old baby whose parents say was taken by a dingo in the Australian Outback.
A LOCUM doctor who failed to administer anaesthetic to a patient undergoing a caesarean section has been ordered to retrain and work under supervision for the next 12 months.
SCOTLAND'S colleges have voiced concerns about a major shake-up of the sector amid claims they have not been given enough time to respond to a review of the institutions.
PATROLS of the A83 at the Rest and Be Thankful will take place over the weekend to look out for further landslides after the Argyll road was re-opened to traffic yesterday.
ONE of Britain's most notorious egg thieves has become the first person to be served with an ASBO that bans him from coming to Scotland during the bird nesting season for the next 10 years.
MOSCOW: Vladimir Putin will reclaim the Kremlin's top job by winning two thirds of the vote in a March presidential election, the last major poll before the vote showed yesterday.
The axe hanging over rural fire stations in one Scottish region was lifted yesterday after an external review team over-ruled the brigade chief and said his plans were wrong.